Lajos Nagy (5 February 1883 – 28 October 1954) was a Hungarian writer.[1] His work covered a number of genres, including travel literature.[2] "He came up with his brief, humoristic stories about animals in the beginning of the 1920s and in 1922 a collection of these short humoresques was published under the title Nonsensical Natural History (Képtelen természetrajz)."[3] He joined the Hungarian Communist Party in 1945 and is considered to be one of the prominent writers in the style of socialist realism in Hungary.
Awards
edit- Baumgarten Prize (1932, 1935 and 1938)
- Kossuth Prize (1948)
Selected works
edit- Három magyar város (Three Hungarian towns) (1933)
- Kiskunhalom (1934)
References
edit- ^ "Nagy Lajos" (in Hungarian). Hungarian biographical lexicon. Retrieved 2017-11-28.
- ^ Wendy Bracewell (2009). Orientations: An Anthology of East European Travel Writing, Ca. 1550-2000. Central European University Press. pp. 251–252. ISBN 978-963-9776-10-4.
- ^ Mercs, István. 2017. “A lábatlan ember például egyet se botlik...” Nagy Lajos Képtelen természetrajz című művéről. [‘A Legless Man, for Instance, Stumbles Not at All...’ An Essay on Lajos Nagy’s Volume, Entitled Nonsensical Natural History.] Certamen IV: 149-156.